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I'd like to compute a measure with the data I have.

So, I began first by computing the average profit per individual with this function: aggregate(profit ~ subjectid, AER, mean)

What I want to obtain is a mean of an individual measure. It means that for every individual I would like to have the mean of the average profit per subject.

Here I tried something which gives me the mean of the profit by subject but doesn't fit exactly my needs.

aggregate(profit ~ subjectid, AER, mean)

Since I have 936 individuals in my dataset, I obtain 936 lines of output (one average profit for every subject). Then, I'd like to subtract a number from this (let's say arbitrary 4) for every line. And then compute the whole mean of this for all my dataset.

aggregate(profit ~ subjectid, AER, mean)

subjectid      profit
1           1  3.2
2           2  0.3
3           3  2.2
4           4  3.0
5           5  3.0
6           6  1.2
...         ...

For instance, the calculation for these 6 lines would be :

mean((3.2-4)+(0.3-4)+(2.2-4)+(3-4)+(3-4)+(1.2-4))

So, the expected output at the end is just a number.

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    Please show a small reproducible example and expected output as we don't know how it doesn't fit to your needs. BTW, if you are using a formula, aggregate(profit ~ subjectid, AER, mean) is enough
    – akrun
    May 16, 2018 at 14:14
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    Using dplyr: result <- AER %>% group_by(subjectid) %>% summarise(measure = mean(profit))... It's hard without examples...
    – Ika8
    May 16, 2018 at 14:18
  • Maybe it is now more clear for you to understand
    – Marc
    May 16, 2018 at 16:02

1 Answer 1

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aggregate is the appropriate function. From the mtcars data, if you wanted to take the mean miles per gallon by number of cylinders (as a proxy for individuals in your dataset), you could use this. See ?mtcars for a description of this dataset; it is useful for providing reproducible examples.

    aggregate(mpg ~ cyl, data=mtcars, FUN=mean)

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